SearchSearch   MemberlistMemberlist   UsergroupsUsergroups  ProfileProfile   Log in to check your private messagesLog in to check your private messages   Log inLog in 

NEWS

 
Post new topic   Reply to topic    Gravon - Das Spielerparadies Forum Index -> English
View previous topic :: View next topic  
Author Message
stratego
Chief-Admin


Joined: 20 May 2003
Posts: 1123
Location: Germany

PostPosted: 30.04.2005 17:17    Post subject: NEWS Reply with quote

hello all,

found this at the www - was a little wondering.....

Woman Claims Her Father Invented "Stratego"

SPRINGFIELD, OR -- Heidi Cox says her father invested the popular game "Stratego", only he called it "Strategy." For years her family has tried to prove it's claims. Now Heidi thinks she has enough evidence to bring about a large settlement.
"They changed the 'y' to an 'o', but everything else is the same; the pieces, the rules," Cox said as she showed off some "Strategy" memorabilia.

For 39 years she believed her father invented the game "Stratego". Now she says she has the proof. "I think my dad is in heaven watching down, very proud finally to be getting some justice," she said.

According to documents held by Heidi Cox, her father, Gunter Elkan, pitched a board game to Milton Bradley in 1948. It was called "Strategy", a game he thought up when he was a boy scout. Milton Bradley passed on his idea.
"They acknowledged the game and then here's the letter two weeks later rejecting the game," she said holding up a letter allegedly from Milton Bradley.

Heidi's dad patented the game anyway. Then, in 1961, Milton Bradley launched "Stratego", which bore a striking resemblance to "Strategy".

Heidi is also excited about the potential royalties from the successful board game.
"The first thing I'm going to do is tithe to my church. Then I want to help people do something for the community," she said.

Milton Bradley says "Hasbro believes that the case is utterly without merit, and there have been no settlement discussions."

Heidi's attorney says the company has approached them about sitting down to talk.

First Coast News
Back to top
View user's profile Send private message Visit poster's website
jerry
Alter Hase


Joined: 16 Jun 2003
Posts: 533
Location: Sydney Australia

PostPosted: 30.04.2005 17:33    Post subject: Rejectiokn Reply with quote

should hve been rejected, how else was it going to not be addictive>..Great in sight their Stratego.. Well informed sir.

Cheeers Jerry.
Back to top
View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail MSN Messenger
darthremark
Fortgeschrittener


Joined: 01 Sep 2004
Posts: 60

PostPosted: 01.05.2005 03:37    Post subject: Reply with quote

This can't possibly be true. Not after everything these Dutchmen have told us for so many years.
Back to top
View user's profile Send private message
esquire
Alter Hase


Joined: 12 Mar 2004
Posts: 383
Location: Michigan, USA

PostPosted: 02.05.2005 18:12    Post subject: http://www.twincities.com/mld/twincities/news/nation/1101304 Reply with quote

Posted on Mon, Feb. 28, 2005



His life was no game. But was the game really his?

By JAMES B. KELLEHER

Orange County Register (Santa Ana, Calif.)

SANTA ANA, Calif. - Carol Laning and her brothers and sisters played a lot of board games as they grew up in California's Orange and San Bernardino counties in the `60s.
But the ones they enjoyed most didn't come out of a box. They came out of the imagination of their German-born father, Gunter Elkan, who created them using graph paper and improvised board pieces.
At least that's how they remember it. Now, they've asked a federal judge in Portland, Ore., to endorse those memories, and award them millions of dollars in back royalties and penalties, in a copyright infringement lawsuit they've filed against Hasbro, the parent of Milton Bradley.
For the past 44 years, Milton Bradley has distributed a war game called "Stratego" that Elkan's kids allege is a pirated version of "Strategy," a game their dad copyrighted and pitched - unsuccessfully - to the gamemaker in the late 1940s and then played with his kids until his death in 1973.
"Once he died, we forgot about it," says Laning, who still lives in Huntington Beach, Calif.
"Oh, there was talk ... especially Heidi. She'd say, `Don't you remember people talking about how Dad invented a board game?' And we'd just say, `Yeah, yeah, whatever.'"
No one's saying "whatever" any more. Not Laning or any of Elkan's other four surviving kids. And certainly not Hasbro, which calls the lawsuit "totally without merit."
But as Laning and her siblings have pressed their startling claim, scouring through their dad's long-forgotten files and talking with the cousins they barely knew, they've discovered a startling story behind the story. Elkan, who was loath to talk about his youth, was Jewish, the son of a prominent inventor who narrowly escaped the Holocaust.
"He must have gone through a lot because he never talked about it," says daughter Heidi Cox, who, like Laning, grew up in Huntington Beach but now lives in Oregon, where she's active in a non-denominational church.
"My mom didn't even know he was Jewish. It brings a tear to my eye just to imagine what he felt - not knowing if he was going to live or die."
That their father had been persecuted was something the kids only learned in recent years. That he was a gamemaker was no surprise at all.
After escaping Nazi Germany through Britain, Elkan settled down for awhile in Canada, then moved to Orange County in 1960 as a widower with kids. In California, he met and married a widow with kids of her own. Together, they had even more.
"It was a `yours, mine and ours' family," Laning says.
Games - games that seemed to spring from his own imagination - were one way Elkan molded the divided brood into a cohesive family. Cox and her siblings say they noticed the games were like board games their friends played.
One especially caught Cox's eye: a capture-the-flag game of military strategy from Milton Bradley called "Stratego." When Cox saw friends playing it in Orange, Upland and finally Huntington Beach, she'd wriggle with proprietary glee and let her little secret fly.
"I'd tell them, `My dad invented that,'" says Cox.
And so she continued to insist for many years. "She never gave up," says Laning, who is 10 years older than Cox and babysat her as a kid. "She's always been like a punching bag. You knock her down and she pops back up."
Evidence that Cox considers iron-clad proof of her claim - and that Hasbro rejects - emerged in recent years, after Cox met her Canadian cousins, the sons and daughters of Elkan's brother. The Canadian cousins were Jews. Just like their father. Just like their father's father. Just like Elkan.
Just like Elkan? "I didn't know he was Jewish," says Laning. "He wasn't a practicing Jew when I knew him."
And the Canadian cousins were the custodians of another secret. The family's departure from Germany in the late 1930s was no coincidence.
Elkan had been rounded up by the Nazis and sent to a concentration camp. His father, Fritz, managed to buy his son's freedom, and then flee Germany with his immediate family. The rest perished in the Holocaust.
Keen to see if her dad's old files contained any more information about his hitherto hidden Judaism, Cox pressed her sister Karen - who inherited Elkan's files and then moved to Canada in the early 1970s - to take a peek.
There wasn't much in the files about Elkan's German past. But there were four documents that re-ignited Cox's certainty that her dad invented Stratego.
The first was a U.S. copyright registration claim Elkan filed in 1948 for a capture-the-flag game he called "Strategy." The second was a letter from Milton-Bradley dated shortly thereafter, acknowledging receipt of his game idea. The third was a letter from Milton Bradley rejecting Strategy.
Thirteen years later, the company began distributing "Stratego."
"I think they figured if they waited long enough, no one would notice," Cox says. "We feel angry and betrayed. How could a company that big do something like that? If they wanted the game, all they had to do was buy the rights. What would it have cost them back then? A thousand dollars?"
Wayne Charness, a senior vice president at Hasbro, insists his company "committed no wrong against Ms. Cox or her father" and that the game it sells as Stratego was "made and sold well before her father allegedly came up with an idea for a game named Strategy."
Fans of the board game say Hasbro may be right. According to Ed Collins, a Placentia, Calif., resident who runs a leading Web site dedicated to the game, Milton Bradley's game is a modern version of one played in the nineteenth century - decades before Elkan was born. Indeed, when Milton Bradley first debuted the game in 1961, it admitted as much, calling Stratego, "The Popular Old World Game Of Skill And Strategy."
"The game's roots go back," says Collins.
According to Collins' site, the game was first manufactured under the Stratego name in Holland shortly after World War II by a company called Smeets & Schippers, which purchased the rights for the game from a Dutchman named Jacques Johan Mogendorff. But some Stratego fans believe Mogendorff's game was simply a copy of a much older game called L'Attaque, which was made in Britain before World War II, right about when Elkan and his family were passing through the country on the way to Canada.
These doubts about the game's origins don't discourage Laning, Cox and their siblings, who say they're confident they'll prevail and that Hasbro will pay dearly.
"The lawyer says it will be millions," says Cox. "He doesn't know how much because it's been going for 45 years."
No matter how the suit is resolved, Elkan's offspring say the Hasbro case is just the start. Next on their to-do list is a lawsuit against Germany. Their claim: That the Nazis stole fuel-enhancing technology their grandfather patented to drive their war effort.
"We're taking things one at a time right now," Cox says.
Back to top
View user's profile Send private message Visit poster's website Yahoo Messenger MSN Messenger
Display posts from previous:   
Post new topic   Reply to topic    Gravon - Das Spielerparadies Forum Index -> English All times are GMT + 1 Hour
Page 1 of 1

 
Jump to:  
You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot vote in polls in this forum


Powered by phpBB © 2001, 2002 phpBB Group